When people upload a file to the new Google Drive online file-storage service, who owns the file?

For answers, one might turn to the unified terms of service that cover all Google products: "When you upload or otherwise submit content to our Services, you give Google (and those we work with) a worldwide license to use, host, store, reproduce, modify, create derivative works (such as those resulting from translations, adaptations, or other changes that we make so that your content works better with our Services), communicate, publish, publicly perform, publicly display, and distribute such content."

In other words, Google appears to reserve the right to do anything it pleases with uploaded data. Or does it?

With such questions now bedeviling Google Drive, here are four privacy--and file-ownership--facts about the new service.

Google's terms of service--which applies to all of the company's "Services"--seems quite wide-reaching. So, does that mean that Google would actually take people's content and reuse it? "I'm sure that the assertion of perpetual, worldwide rights over their customers' intellectual property and the use cases of promoting, improving, or developing new services based on that content is just the result of over-zealous lawyers attempting to head any potential future lawsuit off at the proverbial pass, rather than an outright attempt to go against their in formal motto, 'Don't be evil,'" said Rik Ferguson, director of security research and communication at Trend Micro, in a blog post.

2. Google Doesn't Own People's Files

With such comments accompanying the launch of Google Drive, the company moved quickly to issue a statement clarifying what its terms of service means. "As our Terms of Service make clear, 'what belongs to you stays yours,'" according to the statement. "You own your files and control their sharing, plain and simple. Our Terms of Service enable us to give you the services you want--so if you decide to share a document with someone, or open it on a different device, you can."

But in a close reading of Google Drive competitors' privacy policies, The Verge found that they essentially reserve the same types of rights for themselves--only "they just use slightly more artful language to communicate them." Or as the Microsoft SkyDrive terms of service put it: "Your content remains your content."

In other words, would-be users of online file storage services should weigh more than just Google's privacy policy before trusting their files to the cloud. And in the words of the Microsoft SkyDrive terms of service: "If you don't agree, don't use the service. Thanks."

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